Floorwalker wrote:Did "Jack Benny" ever become Jack's legal name? If so, when did he make the change? Or was he always "Jack Benny" the performer, but still "Benjamin Kubelsky" the person?
shimp scrampi wrote:There are a few "Kubelsky" references here and there as in-jokes in the radio and TV shows, Dennis also gets a "McNulty" reference now and then. Are there any deliberate "Eddie Anderson" or "Sadye Marks" references that anyone can think of?
shimp scrampi wrote:And - in line with the latter - I believe Mary also legally changed her name from Sadye Marks - but to WHAT? She was married to Jack by the time the "Livingstone" name was invented, so did she legally go directly from Sadye Marks to Mary Benny, was 'Livingstone' ever a part of her legal name?
LLeff wrote:shimp scrampi wrote:And - in line with the latter - I believe Mary also legally changed her name from Sadye Marks - but to WHAT? She was married to Jack by the time the "Livingstone" name was invented, so did she legally go directly from Sadye Marks to Mary Benny, was 'Livingstone' ever a part of her legal name?
She changed it from Sadie (spelling per the legal papers...found those when I found Jack's...guess she used both spellings later) Benny to Mary Benny around 1946 (would have to grab the papers to check exactly).
Dennis changed his stage name, then later in life changed it back
shimp scrampi wrote: I don't think the "Livingston" spelling was ever anything but an error on outsiders' part, if you look at autographs and so on, it's always "Livingstone".
shimp scrampi wrote:What exactly was the sequence of McNulty-Day, etc? Are you saying McNulty was a stage name as well?
shimp scrampi wrote:Interesting on the early Livingston <drops spare change into his 'savin' fer "39 Forever" piggy bank'>, it was certainly consistently Livingstone by the Jell-O era onward though?
shimp scrampi wrote:One of the advantages of radio, I guess, you don't have to be a good or consistent speller! Milt Josefsberg has some odd variant spellings in his book as well, "Kitzle", e.g. If there can be two spellings of "Sadie", why not "Livingstone"?
LLeff wrote: I have an NBC tour guidebook from the General Tire timeframe that has autographs of Jack, Mary, and Don Bestor. And Mary signed it "Livingston". C.f. intro of "39 Forever" for a detailed discussion of the Livingston/e controversy.
LLeff wrote:And also Jack's father's name: Meyer vs. Mayer... I recently pulled up the picture of the gravestone to remind me which way it was spelled, and semi-unconsciously said, "M-A-Y-E-R". This gave me an instant mnemonic for it..."my bologna (hopefully kosher) has a second name, it's M-A-Y-E-R."
David47Jens wrote:
That reminds me of a comic book writer/artist named Eric Mayer. He pronounced his last name "MAY-er" (like the "mayor" of a town) but people always assumed it was "MY-er" because of the Oscar Mayer company. He was resigned to this fate since the Oscar Mayer people had "better publicity."![]()
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